Te Papa maintains a Plant Collection, or herbarium, of almost 250,000 dried specimens. It covers both native and introduced flowering plants and gymnosperms, ferns, mosses, liverworts, lichens, and marine algae, from all parts of New Zealand. As well as dried specimens there are plant fossils, a range of timber samples, and material preserved in alcohol.
Te Papa also houses a collection of overseas species, mostly from areas related to New Zealand such as Australia, the Pacific, and Europe.
The collection has been built up in various ways since the foundation of the Museum in 1865:
The oldest New Zealand specimens are those collected by Joseph Banks and Daniel Solander during James Cook’s first voyage in 1769.
In addition to plant specimens, there is an extensive botanical library and archival material, relating to early botanists and collectors.
The herbarium is regularly used by botanists, historians, researchers, and members of the public. As well as researching New Zealand plants, staff provide botanical information to outside organisations and individuals, prepare material for display and education programmes, and give talks and workshops on native plants.
Archival Material
The herbarium holds biographical information about many early New Zealand botanists and details of their collections. The information is held as files of primary and secondary material such as field notebooks, diaries, and correspondence, as card indices and databases, or as published record.